Honeycreeper

The typical honeycreepers form a genus Cyanerpes of small birds in the tanager family Thraupidae. They are found in the tropical New World from Mexico south to Brazil. They occur in the forest canopy, and, as the name implies, they are specialist nectar feeders with long curved bills.

Honeycreeper
male red-legged honeycreeper.
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain:Eukaryota
Kingdom:Animalia
Phylum:Chordata
Class:Aves
Order:Passeriformes
Family:Thraupidae
Genus:Cyanerpes
Oberholser, 1899
Type species
Certhia cyanea
Linnaeus, 1766
Species

Four, all classed as Least Concern

The four Cyanerpes species have colourful legs, long wings and a short tail. The males are typically glossy purple-blue and the females greenish.

Taxonomy and species list

The genus Cyanerpes was introduced in 1899 by the American ornithologist Harry C. Oberholser with the red-legged honeycreeper as the type species.[1][2] The name combines the Ancient Greek kuanos meaning "dark-blue" and herpēs meaning "creeper".[3]

There are two other tanagers with honeycreeper in their common name: the green honeycreeper in the monospecific genus Chlorophanes and the golden-collared honeycreeper in the monospecific genus Iridophanes.[4] These two species are sister taxa and belong to the subfamily Hemithraupinae rather than to Dacninae with the members of Cyanerpes.[5][6]

The genus contains four species:[4]

ImageNameCommon nameDistribution
Cyanerpes nitidusShort-billed honeycreeperBolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, Suriname, and Venezuela
Cyanerpes lucidusShining honeycreeperMexico to Panama and northwest Colombia
Cyanerpes caeruleusPurple honeycreeperColombia and Venezuela south to Brazil, and on Trinidad.
Cyanerpes cyaneusRed-legged honeycreepersouthern Mexico south to Peru, Bolivia and central Brazil, Trinidad and Tobago, and on Cuba

Eggs

A commonly repeated, yet false, belief about the various honeycreeper species is that some of them lay black eggs. This idea was first made known in the scientific community with the 1899 publication of Nehrkorn's egg catalog; Nehrkorn's claim was cited in ornithological literature for many years without verification, but by the 1940s it was established that none of the members of Cyanerpes lay such eggs.[7]

References